Abstract

The polyoma virus (Py) RNA species transcribed from the L DNA strand of the "late" region of the Py genome in Py-infected mouse cells have been mapped by hybridization with specific fragments of Py DNA followed by electron microscopic visualization of the hybrids. Total cellular polyadenylated Py-specific RNA molecules having an S value in the range of 16S to 20S were purified by oligodeoxythymidylic acidcellulose column chromatography, preparative hybridization with Py DNA, and sucrose gradient centrifugation. Cytoplasmic Py-specific RNA was similarily purified, except that it was not fractionated by sucrose gradient centrifugation. Hybrids of these RNA molecules and Py DNA fragments were spread for electron microscopy by either the cytochrome c technique or the bacteriophage T4 gene 32 protein method. The polyadenylic acid at the 3'-end of the RNA in the hybrids was identified by labeling with simian virus 40 DNA circles to which polybromodeoxyuridylic acid tails had been covalently attached. These experiments revealed the presence of three L DNA strand transcripts in both RNA preparations. Two of these RNA molecules were found to be spliced from chains transcribed from two noncontiguous parts of the late region. The third molecule either is a continuous transcript of the entire late region or contains a splicing feature which is too small to be reliably observed by the electron microscope methods used. The 5'-ends of the three RNA species map within a region extending from 68 to 70 map units on the Py restriction endonuclease map. Each of the two spliced molecules contains a 5'-terminal leader sequence transcribed from a DNA segment with an estimated length of 60 to 110 nuvleotides. The 3'-ends of the leaders map at 66.7 +/- 1.0 and 66.4 +/- 0.50 map units. In these molecules the 5'-ends of the other part (the main body) map at 59.4 +/- 0.90 and 49.4 +/- 2.0 map units, respectively. The 3'-termini of all three RNA species map at 24 to 25 map units.